Inch or teaspoon
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 27 answers to crossword clue "Inch or teaspoon"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
UNITInch or teaspoon
DOSETeaspoon or tablet, say
UNITInch or foot
UNITOunce or inch
UNITInch or foot.
UNITInch or ounce
UNITInch or centimeter
UNITInch, foot or yard
UNITOF... length (inch or meter)
UNITPint, inch or second
WORMWord with inch or tape
UNITInch or mile, e.g.
IMPERIALMEASUREBushel or inch, e.g.
TOESLast inch or so of a foot
pitchesThe density of typed or printed characters on a line, typically expressed as numbers of characters per inch
laminalayer of sediment or sedimentary rock only a small fraction of an inch (less than a centimeter) in thickness
laminaelayer of sediment or sedimentary rock only a small fraction of an inch (less than a centimeter) in thickness
microdotA microphotograph, esp. of a printed or written document, that is only about 0.04 inch (1 mm) across
laminaslayer of sediment or sedimentary rock only a small fraction of an inch (less than a centimeter) in thickness
microdotsA microphotograph, esp. of a printed or written document, that is only about 0.04 inch (1 mm) across
incherssomething that has or is associated with a height or length of an inch or a specified number of inches (often used in combination)
inchersomething that has or is associated with a height or length of an inch or a specified number of inches (often used in combination)
ligne(in Swiss watchmaking) a unit equal to 0.0888 inch or 2.2558 millimeters, divided into 12 douziemes: used mainly to gauge the thickness of a movement
lignes(in Swiss watchmaking) a unit equal to 0.0888 inch or 2.2558 millimeters, divided into 12 douziemes: used mainly to gauge the thickness of a movement
liniestnarrow short synthetic tube that is inserted approximately one inch into a vein (as of the arm) to provide temporary intravenous access for the administration of fluid, medication, or nutrients
imperialOf, relating to, or denoting the system of nonmetric weights and measures (the ounce, pound, stone, inch, foot, yard, mile, acre, pint, gallon, etc.) formerly used for all measures in the UK, and still used for some
densitiesA measure of the amount of information on a storage medium (tape or disk). For magnetic tape it is the amount of information recorded per unit length of tape (bits per inch or millimeter); for a disk, a fixed number of bits per sector, sectors per track, and tracks per disk